About Las Brisas Hills

Las Brisas Hills is a pleasant, gated multi-family community centrally located within the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex in North Irving, Texas. Las Brisas Hills currently comprises 301 homes which echo a Spanish/Mediterranean theme incorporating Spanish tile roofs, with a combination of traditional "weeping brick," wood, and stucco facades.

The name of our community refers to its rolling hills and soft breezes, and at the highest point of the property you will find the main clubhouse and pool, where you can enjoy a spectacular view of Las Colinas and the metroplex.

Homes are single story and two story designs with nine (9) unique floor plans which include either, carport & garage combinations or covered parking.

Las Brisas Hills Condominiums Association Mission Statement

The Las Brisas Hills Condominiums Association has been established to promote a sense of community, enhance and maintain safety, welfare, and interests of all homeowners in the subdivision through:

Preserving, enhancing and protecting the property values and assets of the Community.

Enhancing the quality of life through the prudent use of resources for the benefit of all who live, visit, or work in our Community.

Providing responsible management and use of Community assets that benefit all owners.

Providing well-thought-out financial and development plans for the Community.

Collaboratively, through The Board, Management and Members-at-Large, we assume responsibility by the adherence of the bylaws, covenants, rules, conditions, restrictions established for our Community. Much of our committee work is completed in a spirit of volunteerism and excellence for the benefit of the property, the homeowners and the City of Irving in which we live.

History of Las Brisas Hills

The 18" cast iron bell which hangs forty feet above the clubhouse at Las Brisas Hills brings a bit of Southwest history to the community. Brought from Oklahoma by Dondi founder, Don Dixon, the bell is thought to have come from an abandoned Baptist Mission in the 160-year old Choctaw Indian Nation in the Kiamichi Mountains near Snow, Oklahoma.

Legend has it that those who touched the bell and then rang it three times would have good luck for three years. Superstition aside, the church bell has become a symbol of our country's move westward.

According to Dr. J.M. Gaskin, official historian for the Oklahoma Baptist Convention, these missions developed along rivers where game was plentiful and served a dual purpose of church and school.

The majesty of the bell caught Don Dixon's eye and he directed its full restoration. The newly-restored bell, in its new resting place overlooking the woods and lakes of the Las Brisas Hills, can be rung from inside the complex to serve as a symbol for the new community. For the good luck of all who live at Las Brisas Hills, it will be rung at very special times of the year.